More familiar faces are out as Theresa May's brutal government reshuffle continues

New PM's junior ministerial appointments continue her 'out with the old' theme.

Prime Minister Theresa May has continued her root-and-branch cabinet reshuffle over the weekend, as more ministers and junior ministers have found themselves out of a job – including people who supported her leadership bid. One supporter, Anna Soubry, has lost her job as small business minister.

Pensions expert Ros Altmann has been bumped out of her job at the Department for Work and Pensions, to be replaced by junior defence minister Penny Mordaunt. Mordaunt, a Brexit supporter who backed May's leadership rival Andrea Leadsom, will be replaced at the Ministry of Defence by Mike Penning.

The now-former culture minister Ed Vaizey, a good friend of David Cameron, is one of the most experienced cabinet ministers to lose their job, and will leave the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

However, not every Cameron-Osborne appointment has departed; Matt Hancock and Greg Hands are clinging on in new roles, as minister for digital policy and a junior international trade minister respectively.

In other junior ministerial appointments, one of May's campaign backers, Brandon Lewis, was made policing minister, while Robert Goodwill was promoted to the role of immigration minister. Jane Ellison became financial secretary to the treasury, Damian Hinds joins the ministerial team at the DWP, and John Hayes has been given a job as a transport minister.

Conservative MP Ed Vaizey has been demotedGetty

Philip Dunne is now a junior health minister, Nick Hurd becomes minister of state at the new Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Peter Price becomes a junior international trade minister and Sir Oliver Heald has been made a junior minister at the Ministry of Justice.

May has made a series of dramatic changes to the Cabinet in the last weeks, lifting Philip Hammond, Amber Rudd and Boris Johnson to the three great offices of state – chancellor of the exchequer, foreign secretary and home secretary – in a move widely seen as a firm line deliberately drawn under the Cameron years.

The new British cabinet

Theresa May MP - Prime minister

Philip Hammond MP - Chancellor of the Exchequer

Amber Rudd MP – Secretary of State for the Home Department

Boris Johnson MP – Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs

Elizabeth Truss MP – Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice

Michael Fallon MP – Secretary of State for Defence

Damian Green – Secretary of State for Work and Pensions

Jeremy Hunt MP – Secretary of State for Health

David Lidington MP – Lord President of the Council, Leader of the House of Commons

Priti Patel MP – Secretary of State for International Development

Justine Greening MP – Secretary of State for Education, Minister for Women and Equalities

Baroness Evans of Bowes Park – Lord Privy Seal, Leader of the House of Lords

Chris Grayling MP – Secretary of State for Transport

James Brokenshire MP – Secretary of State for Northern Ireland

Andrea Leadsom MP – Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Sajid Javid MP – Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government

Alun Cairns MP – Secretary of State for Wales

Patrick McLoughlin MP – Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster

Karen Bradley MP – Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport

David Mundell MP – Secretary of State for Scotland

Greg Clark MP – Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy

David Davis MP – Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union

Liam Fox MP – Secretary of State for International Trade and President of the Board of Trade